Everything listed under: Michael Holmes

Ok, let's be honest, some people go to the gym to rehab, some for strength, some for stamina, but most of the people who are in a gym are in there for one reason and one reason only: to look good!

For better or worse we are driven by our appearance, or at least what people think of it. Now I know; right now you're saying, "Not me!". But you're lying. The truth is we all are. To most of us, it really does matter to us what people think about how we look...and you know what else, it matters to God too. Don't believe me? Check out "I Work Out!!!: Looking Good" and then see what you think.

Some people are in the gym to rehab, to gain some functionality, but some are in there for a whole other reason: some go just to get stronger. You know the ones, the grunters, the people lifting far more weight to warm up than your using to work out with. They're there for one reason and one reason only, to get stronger!

What would it look like if you worked out your faith to gain some strength? What kind of workout would it be? Check out "I Work Out!!!: Strength" and find out.

re-hab:[ree·hab], v: 1. treatment or treatments designed to facilitate the process of recovery from injury, illness, or disease to as normal a condition as possible; 2.To restore to good health or useful life.

The Bible encourages us to "work out" our faith (1 Corinthians 9:24-27, 1 Timothy 4:7-8) because it will keep our faith from being "ineffective and unproductive" (2 Peter 1:1-8)

Our faith is supposed to be effective and productive. Is yours?

Sometimes, in the course of life, our faith gets "damaged", "injured", "sick" or even "diseased", and it ceases to do what it's supposed to. Has yours been? Is it?

This calls for some "rehab". We're not meant to stay that way or retreat into a shadow of what faith should be. Where does your faith need some "rehab"?

One of the hard things about being a church is the sometimes seemingly paradoxical mission: go make disciples (evangelism), but also feed my sheep (discipleship). If you try to be an evangelistic church you're often criticized for being too shallow or not caring about veteran believers, and if you're a teaching church you are often criticized for not caring enough about the "lost".

At Crossroads we endeavor to do both. We see the two sides of this mission as different points on the same line. How does that work? Check out "Vision: Teaching & Multiplying" to find out.

Vision? What is it and what does it mean (Especially for a church!) Why would one church have one vision and another, well, another? Didn't Jesus give us one mission?

These question often stifle us when trying to carry out and even discern how we fit into that mission. Join us for "Vision 2011" and gain and understanding of what vision is, why we have it and what it means to this church.